Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6309452 | Chemosphere | 2014 | 8 Pages |
â¢GCH concentration influences species richness of protists.â¢GCH concentration above 72 mg Lâ1 was fatal to the protists.â¢GCH concentration above 720 mg Lâ1 had adverse effect on the bacteria community.â¢Colpoda cucullus and Colpoda steinii may be used as biomarkers of GCH-polluted environment.â¢At GCH concentration of 72 mg Lâ1, biodegradation processes may not be affected.
Pervious Pavement Systems are Sustainable Drainage devices that meet the three-fold SUDS functions of stormwater quantity reduction, quality improvement and amenity benefits. This paper reports on a study to determine the impact of different concentrations of glyphosate-containing herbicides on non-target microorganisms and on the pollutant retention performance of PPS. The experiment was conducted using 0.0484 m2 test rigs based on a four-layered design. Previous studies have shown that PPS can trap up to 98.7% of applied hydrocarbons, but results of this study show that application of glyphosate-containing herbicides affected this capability as 15%, 9% and 5% of added hydrocarbons were released by high (7200 mg Lâ1), medium (720 mg Lâ1) and low (72 mg Lâ1) glyphosate-containing herbicides concentrations respectively. The concentrations of nutrients released also indicate a potential for eutrophication if these effluents were to infiltrate into aquifers or be released into surface waters. The effect of glyphosate-containing herbicides application on the bacterial and fungal communities was slightly different; fungi exhibited a “top-down” trend as doses of 7200 mg Lâ1 glyphosate-containing herbicides yielded the highest fungal growth whilst those with a concentration of 720 mg Lâ1 glyphosate-containing herbicides applied yielded the highest bacterial growth. In the case of protists, doses of glyphosate-containing herbicides above 72 mg Lâ1 were fatal, but they survived at the lower concentration, especially the ciliates Colpoda cucullus and Colpoda steinii thus indicating potential for their use as biomarkers of herbicide-polluted environments. Data also showed that at the lowest concentration of glyphosate-containing herbicides (72 mg Lâ1), biodegradation processes may not be affected as all trophic levels required for optimum biodegradation of contaminants were present.
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